My melodica (the same model as this guy is playing Amelie-like music with in this video) should be showing up within a few days.
Got it brand new off of eBay for less than $50! Pretty sweet. I'm excited about that. I have a concertina and a set of harmonicas, and I love that accordion/harmonica reed sound, but each instrument sounds a little different even when they use the same reeds. The melodica will allow me to play notes like a piano (instead of the C/G button format of the concertina) and will be much simpler to play (and more compact to store or carry) than an accordion would be. Plus, concertina and most accordions are diatonic, so they play a different note when squeezing in than they do when pulling out. I would also love to have a harmonium, but I figure this melodica will suffice (harmonium is much more expensive and bigger -- if you don't know what that is, it's the instrument from Punch Drunk Love; sort of like a cross between a small piano/organ and an accordion)
Thursday, April 24, 2008
So... I ordered a Melodica
Saturday, March 22, 2008
5 Neck Guitar?
I don't ever remember this. Shows how much attention I pay to Cheap Trick.
But this is a little overkill, no?
But this is a little overkill, no?
Tuesday, March 04, 2008
PAiA Theremax ftw
Well, let me tell you this: building a PAiA Theremax theremin from scratch, mounting it into an Atari 2600 case, and getting it work right is no small feat!
After many, many long hours soldering and snipping and hotgluing and wrestling a bird's nest of wires, it seemed I finally had completed the (basic) Theremax setup... sans the extra modifications I plan to add, but I figured I'd better test out the basic system first.
So... I crossed my fingers and plugged it in and switched it on and... nothing. The power LED didn't even light. No smoke or fireworks just... nothing. Dead? No power? Who knows. So... I reached out to switch it off and unplug and POP! A loud snapping explosion like a firecracker went off under my arm.
I switched it off and looked and... sure enough, an electrolytic capacitor has exploded open.
Well, turns out that the wiring of the power supply they gave me was OPPOSITE the normal markings (this one had white stripe for +, black wire for -)... so I was sending negative polarity through the board when it should have been positive!
So much for the name "Kid Electric"
Anyway, I rewired the power supply and reconnected some of the ground-wire connections and... voila! LED is go! Not only that, but I bypassed the volume antenna circuit with a jumper cable and was able to get sound out of the pitch antenna and null it out so that I can control the pitch! Pretty exciting stuff...
Unfortunately, when I removed the volume-bypass gimmick and try to get it working NORMALLY (with volume circuit), I can't get it to make a peep. :(
Will update more if I ever conquer this beast...
After many, many long hours soldering and snipping and hotgluing and wrestling a bird's nest of wires, it seemed I finally had completed the (basic) Theremax setup... sans the extra modifications I plan to add, but I figured I'd better test out the basic system first.
So... I crossed my fingers and plugged it in and switched it on and... nothing. The power LED didn't even light. No smoke or fireworks just... nothing. Dead? No power? Who knows. So... I reached out to switch it off and unplug and POP! A loud snapping explosion like a firecracker went off under my arm.
I switched it off and looked and... sure enough, an electrolytic capacitor has exploded open.
Well, turns out that the wiring of the power supply they gave me was OPPOSITE the normal markings (this one had white stripe for +, black wire for -)... so I was sending negative polarity through the board when it should have been positive!
So much for the name "Kid Electric"
Anyway, I rewired the power supply and reconnected some of the ground-wire connections and... voila! LED is go! Not only that, but I bypassed the volume antenna circuit with a jumper cable and was able to get sound out of the pitch antenna and null it out so that I can control the pitch! Pretty exciting stuff...
Unfortunately, when I removed the volume-bypass gimmick and try to get it working NORMALLY (with volume circuit), I can't get it to make a peep. :(
Will update more if I ever conquer this beast...
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
News
Not too exciting, but...
after recording my first song ("Seek and Hide", to avoid confusion with the quite-different Imogen Heap song), I am ready to re-record the vocals (which were sort of scratchy, gravelly, and experimental when I first recorded them)
Also, I modified the Dr. Who Cyberman-stencilled toolbox which houses the PAiA Vocoder 6710 I got off of eBay. It had extra room to magically fit my Antares AVP-1 Vocal Producer rackmount unit, so I installed that in there and drilled holes in the back/bottom of the toolbox for the audio/power jacks. Now it is a truly badass vocal unit, which works as follows:
I run my retro-looking Nady large-diaphragm condenser mic (phantom-powered XLR) through my E-mu 1820 audio interface; this works well, because I can directly record clean audio and also because the phantom-power and XLR interface means I can't just plug it into the Antares or vocoder. So what I do is add an Insert to the appropriate recording strip (associated with the Nady) in my ASIO PatchMix DSP to have an ASIO send to the physical output (stereo 1L/1R) on the back of the E-Mu 1820. I send this to the Mic Input of the AVP-1, THEN patch-cable it to the Mic In (Instrument 2) jack of the vocoder, which I will most often use with my Novation X-Station, but the beauty of it is that I can use any instrument to vocode my voice... Atari, concertina, whatever (I can't wait to see what it sounds like when the Pole Position engine rumble starts singing!)... also, it's no problem if I don't want to vocode it, because there is an instrument bypass switch on the vocoder to let the clean signal through (either for Instrument 1, or Instrument 2 - the microphone/vocals)
So, in short, I can easily choose to have a clean signal or to vocally-process my voice, auto-tune it, compress, de-ess, vocode, or any combination of the above... all without pulling out or switching any microphones or jacks!
Needless to say, my little home studio is turning into a bit of a spider's-web of wires...
PS. Also learning to play This Charming Man and Annie's Song. I'll post another update once something exciting happens (ie. more song recordings, public song postings, OR completion of the Theremax theremin I am building...)
after recording my first song ("Seek and Hide", to avoid confusion with the quite-different Imogen Heap song), I am ready to re-record the vocals (which were sort of scratchy, gravelly, and experimental when I first recorded them)
Also, I modified the Dr. Who Cyberman-stencilled toolbox which houses the PAiA Vocoder 6710 I got off of eBay. It had extra room to magically fit my Antares AVP-1 Vocal Producer rackmount unit, so I installed that in there and drilled holes in the back/bottom of the toolbox for the audio/power jacks. Now it is a truly badass vocal unit, which works as follows:
I run my retro-looking Nady large-diaphragm condenser mic (phantom-powered XLR) through my E-mu 1820 audio interface; this works well, because I can directly record clean audio and also because the phantom-power and XLR interface means I can't just plug it into the Antares or vocoder. So what I do is add an Insert to the appropriate recording strip (associated with the Nady) in my ASIO PatchMix DSP to have an ASIO send to the physical output (stereo 1L/1R) on the back of the E-Mu 1820. I send this to the Mic Input of the AVP-1, THEN patch-cable it to the Mic In (Instrument 2) jack of the vocoder, which I will most often use with my Novation X-Station, but the beauty of it is that I can use any instrument to vocode my voice... Atari, concertina, whatever (I can't wait to see what it sounds like when the Pole Position engine rumble starts singing!)... also, it's no problem if I don't want to vocode it, because there is an instrument bypass switch on the vocoder to let the clean signal through (either for Instrument 1, or Instrument 2 - the microphone/vocals)
So, in short, I can easily choose to have a clean signal or to vocally-process my voice, auto-tune it, compress, de-ess, vocode, or any combination of the above... all without pulling out or switching any microphones or jacks!
Needless to say, my little home studio is turning into a bit of a spider's-web of wires...
PS. Also learning to play This Charming Man and Annie's Song. I'll post another update once something exciting happens (ie. more song recordings, public song postings, OR completion of the Theremax theremin I am building...)
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